When early voting ended in Nevada's largest Clark County Friday night, Democrats had a nearly 73,000 vote advantage, larger than President Obama had four years ago when he won the state by 7 points.

The stats were gathered by Nevada's premier political reporter Jon Ralston, who wrote Saturday morning that Trump "needs a Miracle in Vegas on Election Day" to pull out a win in Nevada now.

Statewide – and without all the rural counties counted– it looked as if Democrats had a roughly 45,000 vote advantage in Nevada, Ralston reported. That translates into about a 6-point Democratic lead already banked going into Election Day, a sign that Clinton may pull out a win there and assist Democrats down ballot, too.

The highly contested race to fill the Senate seat of the retiring Harry Reid could determine who controls the Senate, giving the Nevada early voting numbers even more national significance.

If Republicans had hoped to improve their performance in 2016 with minority voters, it's likely they'll be in for a reckoning Tuesday.

In the final days of his campaign, Trump has changed nothing about the way he talks about Latinos and African-American voters – core Democratic constituencies that seem to be turning out so far for Clinton in early voting.

As her supporters braved rainy conditions in Pembroke Pines, Florida, Hillary Clinton delivered an abbreviated version of her stump speech Saturday that pivoted from her usual criticisms of Donald Trump to an inclusive message.

"I want to be the president for everybody, everybody who agrees with me, people don't agree with me, people who vote for me, people who don't vote for me," she said, in what was the climax of her roughly seven-and-a-half minute speech. "So let's get out. Let's vote for the future!"

Donald Trump and Speaker of the House Paul Ryan may never appear together on stage in the 2016 election.

Shortly after Ryan told reporters that he planned to show up for a Trump event scheduled for Sunday, the Trump campaign made the decision to scrap the stop in Wisconsin, according to a report from The Cap Times.

Rudy Giuliani on Friday insisted that he had no prior knowledge that FBI Director James Comey would announce the discovery of emails potentially related to the agency's probe into Hillary Clinton’s private email server, even though he hinted at “big surprises” to come in the 2016 race just days before Comey’s letter shook up the election.

Latino voters are already showing up to vote this election and could cast ballots in larger numbers than Democrats saw in recent elections.

On a call with reporters Friday, Latino Decisions– a polling group focused on Hispanic voting patters– said that Latino turnout is on track to make history next week.

On the call, Gabriel Sanchez, a principal at Latino Decisions, pointed to early voting trends that show Latino early voting is up 100 percent in Florida, 60 percent in North Carolina and up 25 percent in Colorado and Nevada.

Sanchez said at this point, Latino Decisions is projecting that between 13.1 million and 14.7 million Latinos will vote on or before Tuesday– a major increase from 2012 numbers when the group estimated 11.2 million voted.

The numbers are a good sign for Hillary Clinton who has seen the race tighten in recent days. Latino Decisions is estimating– using their own turnout predictor– that Clinton is on track to capture 79 percent of the Latino vote. Trump, on the other hand, is expected to garner only 18 percent (almost 10 points down from Romney's 27 percent performance.)

A thinly-sourced Fox News report suggesting an indictment was “likely” in a FBI inquiry into the Clinton Foundation ricocheted around the internet Wednesday night before Donald Trump stated it as fact at a Thursday rally in Florida.

To top it off, the original report had been walked back hours before Trump even took the stage.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), the Senate majority whip, wouldn't say Tuesday if Republicans would permanently block Hillary Clinton's Supreme Court nominees if she were elected president, as some GOP senators have been promising on the campaign trail.

In a radio interview with KFYO in Texas, Cornyn said he didn't want to "speculate" about what Republicans should do if Clinton is elected and in a position to appoint Supreme Court justices.